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REPAIRS AND IMPROVEMENTS.

' . To keep a fa in in repair requires the careful attention of the owner from the very day it, is put into use. Trees, &c., that arc set for ornament or shade, improve from the hour they begin to grow ; but pretty much everything else upon the farm begins to show decay from the day when it is exposed to the arm and rain. The best of paint parts with much of its lustre in a month, begins to fade in three, is quite dull in six months, and requires renewing in a year. New piee board fences look fresh, and enliven the farm scenery for a time, but all farm fixtures are so exposed to the elements that indications of decay sot in at the start, and (his tendency never diminishes. Hence, with those facta before him, it standa the farmer in band to build with a view to the natural tendency in buildings and pictures to vary from the perpendicular and to get maty. Gate posts and fence poets that are not at first set strictly upright, unless changed, ever afterwards remain so. Inexpensive buildings receive more or less injury from the. foundation at any point becoming defective ; hence it is better to guard against the corner going down before the structure is placed upon it. The sagging gates or the untidy bars affect the appearance of all in the immediate vicin-ity, The gate post is never too deeply or too firmly planted, and for a heavy gate hardly any depth or firmness of soil about the binge post will absolutely insure against sagging. But a heavy stick, or three-inch plank, placed just beneath the surface* with an end against each, post, will, as a rule, hold the hingepost perpendicular and the gate level. The impressions upon the minds of railway travellers as they pass through a fanning district vary as much ns those of the lover of art, as lie passes from a piece by one of the first masters to the merest daub by the scene painter. Farms at best as they are usually traversed by railroad tracks—no regard being had to lines —are seen at a disadvantage. Yet if fences are erect and straight, and afford a reasonably sure harrier against trespassing animals, the-building kept in repair, and the immediate premises kept clear of rubbish, if the strength of the land is not unduly taken by slipshod tillage, the manure pile in the meantime being left to rot in tiie barn yard, impressions received from any view will be favourable. But perhaps the neglect to drain wet places upon the farm is as common a fault as any other, and one that shows the neatness in fields, and entails lessened profits with unvarying certainty. When the team can be driven, with a load, over ground hitherto too wet and soft to bear an empty waggon, then it is evident that drainage has been made available. No land should be left about the corners or other parts of fields in such condition that water will stand long enough upon it to prevent a good crop of corn being grown (hereon. As it has been proved possible to redeem impassable swamps, there can be no reasonable excuse for continuing to tolerate unsightly angular parcels of wet ground in enclosed fields, kept either for tillage or for grass. It ,is said that a man may generally bo known by the company he keeps ; so the business character of the owner of the farm on the right of the road, or that one on the left, may be pietty correctly estimated at a glance, even from the window of the car moving at high speed. The furrows being turned by the moving team, whether these are straight and deep or crooked and shallow, are facts that, disconnected frem all others, have a pointed meaning.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PATM18821222.2.11

Bibliographic details

Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 975, 22 December 1882, Page 2

Word Count
648

REPAIRS AND IMPROVEMENTS. Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 975, 22 December 1882, Page 2

REPAIRS AND IMPROVEMENTS. Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 975, 22 December 1882, Page 2

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